A review of early optical GRB features including prompt emission, reverse shocks, and afterglow onset, highlighting robotic telescopes' role in constraining jet Lorentz factors and magnetization.
Thermal Electrons in an Ultra-Relativistic Shock Shape the Optical Afterglow of GRB 250702F
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abstract
Observing early optical emission from gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) contemporaneous with the MeV prompt emission phase remains rare, requiring rapid-response robotic facilities. The Ond\v{r}ejov D50 telescope detected the optical counterpart of GRB 250702F at z = 1.520 only 27.8 s after trigger, enabling high-cadence monitoring during the brightest prompt emission pulses. The optical light curve reveals two distinct flares. The first (30 - 100 s) is spectrally consistent with the MeV prompt emission. The second flare (100 - 1400 s) exhibits an unusual morphology (F_nu ~ t^-alpha): a rapid rise to a plateau, followed by a steep decay (alpha ~ 1.6) before transitioning to a standard power-law afterglow (alpha = 0.79). This steep decay phase cannot be explained by nonthermal electrons accelerated at the forward shock, and reverse-shock scenario is disfavored due to the long duration of the flare and the temporal offset from the underlying deceleration time. We interpret the steep decay as the synchrotron frequency of a thermal (Maxwellian) electron population sweeping through the optical band. Modeling yields a non-thermal energy fraction delta ~ 0.8 with the remaining energy heating electrons at characteristic Lorentz factor gamma_th ~ 900. These observations provide evidence for thermal electron signatures in GRB afterglows, consistent with predictions from particle-in-cell simulations of ultra-relativistic collisionless shocks.
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2026 1verdicts
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Early Optical Follow-up of Gamma-Ray Bursts: The Critical Role of Robotic Telescopes
A review of early optical GRB features including prompt emission, reverse shocks, and afterglow onset, highlighting robotic telescopes' role in constraining jet Lorentz factors and magnetization.